No. 1 spot to buy a house? Try Tampa Bay

That's according to Forbes magazine, which sees us bouncing back big.

By JAMES THORNER, Times Staff Writer
Published July 25, 2007

http://www.sptimes.com/2007/07/25/Business/No_1_spot_to_buy_a_ho.shtml


 
<a href="http://cdslog.contextweb.com/CDSLogger/L.aspx?q=C~501618~484~11379~20699~8123~101~146~0~sptimes.com~2~8~1~0~2~1~bRt1RJLXieUiHglKrRPY4I8O717ptQrKd-eAYAGeSGs^~6~http%3a%2f%2fclk.atdmt.com%2fIWC%2fgo%2fcntxiche0010000128iwc%2fdirect%3bat.iwcche00000719%3bct.1%2f01%2f"> <img src="http://media.contextweb.com/creatives/CitiBankHomeEquity/hi_04_300x250_P-.76.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="250" border="0"> </a>

The online edition of Forbes magazine, with help from business prognosticator Moody's Economy.com, touts the Tampa Bay area as the No. 1 place in the country to buy a house.

Come again? Aren't we supposed to be in the throes of housing agony?

Hear them out: Because of our area's overall strong, growing economy and comparably modest housing prices, Forbes calls Tampa-St.Petersburg-Clearwater a prime bounce-back market.

It predicts our area will experience what it calls a V-shaped recovery, where a market experiences a free fall, but rebounds strongly once it hits bottom.

Other regions will chart U-shaped or L-shaped courses. U-shaped recoveries are those in which prices fall slowly and recover gradually. Think Boston and Sacramento.

The L-shaped phenomenon is when prices plummet but remain mostly in a trough owing to underlying economic problems in the city. Think Detroit.

"While the Tampa market has yet to bottom out, the silver lining for buyers is that it is a highly resilient market," the article says.

"Most of the fallout in Tampa can be attributed to its high investor share, which is correctable given the good economic and job-growth projections."

To get on Forbes' top 10 list, a region needed an oversupply of real estate with plenty of sellers keen to strike a bargain. That's not all, though. Forbes also sought areas where prices wouldn't fall cataclysmically, so that buyers wouldn't be booking a fare on a sinking ship.

Based on Moody's figures, Tampa Bay home prices should bottom out in the first quarter of 2008, once the region burns off excess inventory from speculators who went hog wild in 2005.

Fast Facts:  Forbes' top 10

1. Tampa

2. Minneapolis

3. Miami

4. Kansas City

5. Chicago

6. Phoenix

7. San Diego

8. Milwaukee

9. New York City

10. Atlanta

[Last modified July 24, 2007, 23:42:23]

Real Estate
Most Resilient U.S. Real Estate Markets
Matt Woolsey, 06.08.07, 12:01 AM ET

 
row2image
In Pictures: Most Resilient U.S. Real Estate Markets

Also In Lifestyle
 
Best SUVs 2007
World's Most Expensive Homes 2007
How To Avoid A Heart Attack
Chic Boutique Hotels
Men's Guide To Power Dressing

 By This Author
Matt Woolsey
In Pictures: Stunning Solar-Powered Homes
Stunning Solar-Powered Homes
Best And Worst U.S. Housing Markets
More Headlines
RSS News Feed 

Popular Videos
 
Adventurer: Peter Buffett
Inside the Chrysler Sebring Convertible
America's Next Hip Hop Star
StreetTalk: Dollar Dividends Strike A Balance
Notes On The News: Post Euphoria Panic

 Related Stories
Leona's Large Legacy
Foreclosures Keep Rising
Home Foreclosures Rise In July
Best And Worst U.S. Housing Markets
In Pictures: Worst U.S. Housing Markets

 

When it comes to real estate, the questions on everyone's lips are: How low is low, and when's the perfect time to buy back in?

That moment has passed in Seattle and Charlotte--both metros hit bottom in the first quarter of 2006 and have since posted price gains of 12.3% and 6.3%, respectively, according to National Association of Realtors (NAR) data.

Of the 40 largest metros that have yet to bottom out, which are ripe for investment? Philadelphia and New Orleans. Based on housing inventory and local economic conditions, both should hit price troughs by year's end and bounce back with moderate gains around 4% in 2008.

In Pictures: Most Resilient U.S. Real Estate Markets

Video: Best Bounce-Back Markets

In markets expected to recover more slowly, such as Boston and Denver, low buyer confidence coupled with a surplus of housing stock has lengthened the slump. NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun points out that buyers are looking for clear signs of a market bottom and are content to wait on the sidelines until then.

It's easy to see why. Most of the country's real estate markets are feeling the effects of overproduction. A strong market hovers near a 1.5% vacancy rate, but the national average currently stands at 2.8% and in cities such as Miami, Atlanta and Denver, figures hang around 3.5%. In addition, every nugget of good news (a May Commerce Department report said that new-home sales are at a 14-year high) comes with bad news (median price growth is at a 10-year low).

Related Stories
Best And Worst Housing Markets

Most Overpriced Real Estate

So which other metro area markets stand the best chance of recovery, and when will that upturn occur?

Behind The Numbers
Market corrections follow three basic recovery patterns. A V-shaped recovery where a market experiences a sharp, fast decline but comes out strong once it hits bottom; a U-shaped recovery, where prices decline gradually and recover slowly; and an L-shaped curve, a hard, fast fall with paltry price bounceback following the market trough.

The differences between a V-shaped market and a U-shaped one has to do with barriers to growth. High vacancy rates and high investor share can hurt a market, but if the local economy remains strong and housing stock affordable it's only a matter of how long it takes to absorb the excess inventory.

Tampa is a perfect candidate for a V-shaped recovery, according to research from Moody's Economy.com, an economic analysis, forecasting and credit risk firm. The local economy remains strong, and subprime lending is relatively low. Tampa's problem? A high investor share that lead to high vacancy rates. When the market turned sour in 2005, more than 25% of Tampa homes were owned as investment properties. Investors are quicker to flee during a downturn, thus creating a glut of available housing stock. In Tampa's case, vacancy rates now stand at 3.5%.

"As investors exit, the market revives," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at West Chester, Pa.-based research firm Moody's Economy.com, as fewer speculative buyers results in a more stable market. "Tampa's a pretty affordable market and first-time buyers can come in once prices fall."

In the market for a seven-figure home? How much domain your dollar will net depends on where you look. Click here to see homes in each state.

Based on Moody's Economy projections, Tampa should burn off its excess inventory and hit a price trough in the first quarter of 2008, at which point prices are expected to increase by 10.6% the following year.

These projections take into account housing affordability, vacancy rates, the strength of the local economy and job market, investor share in 2005 and the share of subprime mortgages. Data comes from Moody's, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Federal Reserve's Home Mortgage Disclosure Act.

Predicting the bottom of any asset market, especially real estate, is a difficult thing. While these projections are based on sound data and advanced modeling by Moody's, no one can predict futures markets with absolute certainty.

Other Bounce Backs
Like Tampa, Phoenix is similarly afflicted by high investor share (26.1%) and it has a vacancy rate over 3%. Good affordability rates and a surging job market suggest that once Phoenix bottoms out, price growth will be strong. Moody's projection model has Phoenix reaching its price trough in the fourth quarter of 2008 and then growing by 7.7% the following year.

Slower recovery rates are expected in markets such as Minneapolis and Boston, where a slumping local economy, slow job growth and negative migration numbers hamper long term prospects. Along with other U-shaped markets like Sacramento, that have double-digit subprime lending share, Zandi says it's going to be harder for these markets to get going again.

 

That doesn't necessarily mean V-shaped markets are in the clear. The labor markets in cities such as Las Vegas, Phoenix and San Diego, whose future economic success will be critical to recovery, are heavily in housing-related industries, according to Moody's. So long as those economies can weather their respective corrections, they should be all right.

"These markets are going to experience more substantial declines in the coming year," says Zandi. "Gauging the bottom is a very intrepid affair and the job market is very important to recovery."

BACK TO INVESTING